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Who Is Using Opioids and Opiates?

Chronic Pain and Prescription Painkillers The Dangers of Drug Abuse The Heroin Crisis Preventing and Treating Addiction Who Is Using Opioids and Opiates?

Who Is Using Opioids and Opiates?

Xina M. Uhl

Mason Crest Philadelphia

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O PIOIDS AND O PIATES : T HE S ILENT E PIDEMIC series ISBN: 978-1-4222-3822-6

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Table of Contents 1: A Different Epidemic ..............................................7 2: What Are Opiates ..................................................13 3: The Range of Opioids and Opiates ......................19 4: Avenues to Addiction............................................29 5: Living as an Addict ................................................39 6: Over and Through Addiction ..............................49 Series Glossary of Key Terms....................................58 Further Reading ........................................................59 Internet Resources ....................................................60 Index ..........................................................................62 Photo Credits/About the Author..............................64

Words to understand: These words with their easy-to-understand definitions will increase the reader’s understanding of the text while building vocabulary skills.

Sidebars: This boxed material within the main text allows readers to build knowledge, gain insights, explore possibilities, and broaden their perspectives by weaving together additional information to provide realistic and holistic perspectives. Educational Videos: Readers can view videos by scanning our QR codes, providing them with additional educational content to supplement the text. Examples include news cover- age, moments in history, speeches, iconic sports moments and much more!

Text-dependent questions: These questions send the reader back to the text for more careful attention to the evidence presented there.

Research projects: Readers are pointed toward areas of further inquiry connected to each chapter. Suggestions are provided for projects that encourage deeper research and analysis. Series glossary of key terms: This back-of-the-book glossary contains terminology used throughout this series. Words found here increase the reader’s ability to read and comprehend higher-level books and articles in this field.

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Words to Understand in This Chapter

junkie— a person addicted to narcotics. overdose— to take a lethal or toxic amount of a drug. rehab— a rehabilitation treatment for addicts.

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According to the Centers for Disease Control, 91 Americans die every day from an opioid overdose. On December 15, 2016, one such victim was Jacob DeGroote, a popular student-athlete from Arizona.

A Different Epidemic

I n many ways, he was the ideal American boy. An all-star athlete and academic, he had a longtime girlfriend. He was well-liked and hardworking, juggling two jobs at once. His smile lit up the room. And at age 20, Jacob DeGroote was dead. A clean-cut young man from the Phoenix, Arizona suburbs, he didn’t look like a junkie . It started when someone gave him a pill at school. From there, he took another. And another. Soon, he was using black tar heroin. The smart young man had a 4.2 grade point average. Notre Dame’s football program was recruiting him, and he had been offered a full ride at Northern Arizona University. He also had a big problem. His mother was a nurse in a hospital emergency room. But even she didn’t know he was addicted to opiates.

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Who Is Using Opioids and Opiates?

“He didn’t want to be an addict,” Jacob’s mother, Mari DeGroote, said. “He wanted more than anything to get well.” He agreed to a stint in rehab . He said, “I wish I’d never taken that first pill. I never thought I would become addicted. I thought I could be smarter than the pills.” Family problems followed: fights over his drug use and Jacob’s parents kicking him out of the house. He went away to rehab and the night he returned home he doubled up on pre- scription sleep and anxiety medications. His breathing stopped first, then his heart. Jacob is just one of many victims of drug addiction. A Growing Epidemic Since 1999, the number of overdose deaths has claimed more than half a million people—quadruple the rate it had been prior to this. The majority of these deaths involve opioids, both prescription opioids and heroin. Once an inner city, low- income user problem, the scourge of opioid abuse has moved into the suburbs. Now it affects the lives of Americans both rich and poor, urban and rural. It respects no ethnic or cultur- al differences. Abusers range from pre-teens to the elderly, from one end of the United States to the other. Opioid addiction has become more than a set of sobering statistics. It has become an epidemic, one which continues to claim lives, destroy families, and crowd jails and prisons due to users who steal and commit worse crimes to feed their habits. It overwhelms hospital emergency rooms, and costs employers millions in lost productivity.

A Different Epidemic

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The Scope of the Problem The problem shows no signs of slowing down. In its most recent report, issued in 2016, the Centers for Disease Control reported that statistically significant increases in death rates

An Equal Opportunity Addiction O n April 21, 2016, 57-year-old music icon Prince was found unre- sponsive in his Minnesota home. Shortly thereafter, he died. While the world mourned the loss of his musical genius, questions arose. What happened? The day before his death, an opioid addiction specialist had been called in to help him. It was too late. The medical examiner’s office conducted toxicology tests which revealed that the singer died from an accidental overdose of the opioid fentanyl. Celebrities are not the only ones to suffer from addiction. Michelle, a suburban mother from Portsmouth, Virginia, once spent her days packing school lunches and helping her children with their homework. But then a pain prescription for a toothache opened her to the world of drug abuse. Sometimes she took up to 60 pills a day. She went from doctor to doctor asking for prescriptions to feed her habit. She bought opioids off the Internet, and finally on the street. Street drugs drew her into addiction to heroin, crack cocaine, and crystal meth. She aban- doned her family six years later. “The disease got a hold of me more. I didn’t care about anything but the drugs,” she later said. “At the time, drugs were becoming more and more the center of my life.” Eventually, Michelle was able to successfully end her dependence on drugs. But she is careful to explain that she must always be on her guard against relapse. If she doesn’t, she could be one of the fatality statistics herself.

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Who Is Using Opioids and Opiates?

US Overdose Deaths Involving Opioid Painkillers, 1999–2014

20,000

15,000

10,000

5,000

1999 2000 2001 20022003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Source: Centers for Disease Control, https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/health_policy/AADR_drug_poisoning_involving_OA_Heroin_US_2000-2014.pdf

due to opioid abuse occurred in a number of states: Maine, 26.2 percent; Connecticut, 25.6 percent; Maryland, 20.1; New Hampshire, 30.9 percent; New Jersey; Rhode Island; Kentucky, 21.1 percent; and Florida, 22.7 percent. Predictions from Columbia University experts state that overdose deaths may peak in 2017, though they are not predicted to fall until 2034. In 2016, President Barack Obama issued a proclamation for the Prescription Opioid and Heroin Epidemic Awareness Week, which took place from September 18 through September 26. He called for increased awareness and funding for this pub- lic health crisis. Clearly, opioid-related abuse is not going any- where soon. The pages that follow will focus on what opioids

A Different Epidemic 11

do, how they work, who suffers from the epidemic, and how it happens. You’ll learn about a drug that has been around for hundreds of years in various forms. And about the latest devel- opments in synthetic opioid production and distribution. Despite the frightening statistics and serious health conse- quences from addiction, there is hope for recovery. While avoiding drug use to begin with is the easiest and best solution, we will also cover the range of options for recovery from this difficult problem.

Text-Dependent Questions

1. How has opioid abuse changed from the past to the present? 2. How does opioid addiction impact the community? 3. Has opioid addiction topped out or is it continuing to rise?

Research Project

What does the opioid addiction problem look like in your local community? For this research project, you will research what is happening. Three sources of information are necessary. These can be articles from the local or state newspapers, news videos about the problem, statements from law enforcement and medical personnel, even interviews with your school administrators or counselors. Ask: is opioid abuse a problem here? How has drug addiction changed over the last few years? What is being done to edu- cate people about drugs? When you are finished, write a one page essay about what you found. Be sure to list your sources at the end of your essay.

Words to Understand in This Chapter

derive— to take from a certain source. euphoria— an intense feeling of well-being. narcotic— a drug that dulls the senses, relieves pain, and can cause stupor, coma, or death. synthesize— to produce something from another source.

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Opiates are a class of drugs that are derived from natural sources, such as the sap of the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum . This plant grows naturally in Asia and Europe. Opiates come in many different forms, including pills, powders, and liquids.

What Are Opiates?

P oppies are pretty flowers popular in gardens. The California state flower is a poppy, a certain strain that is orange. Opium poppies, though, have a powerful narcotic hidden in their seed pods. These delicate flowers bloom in red, white, or purple in a hot climate. When the flower petals fall off, cuts in seed pods produce a milky sap. This sap contains the narcotic known as opium. Raw opium is formed into lumps or cakes that can be dried out into powder. For centuries, opium was used as a powerful painkiller—one of the few effective drugs. Practitioners smoked it, ate it, or drank it in a sort of tea. It was used to soothe the pain of internal bleeding, broken bones, coughs, cancer, childbirth, and toothaches. Other conditions such as insomnia, anxiety, and fear before battle also responded well to the treatment.

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Who Is Using Opioids and Opiates?

Opium Through the Ages F ive thousand years ago, ancient people from Assyria and Sumeria were the first to use opium. They called the opium poppy hul gil , which means “joy plant.” They may have discovered opium’s narcotic properties by observing cattle that became intoxicated after eating the plant’s seed pods. Clay tablets from 2000 BCE recommend a potion of crushed poppies and fly droppings to help calm unhappy children. Cultivation of the plant spread eastward into Greece. By the sev- enth century CE it reached China. There, it was taken in a pill form or mixed into beverages. Arab traders introduced opium west as far as Spain and north as far as Vienna by the ninth century CE . As Columbus explored the seas in the fifteenth century one of the items he was tasked with bringing home was opium. In 1680, a British physician named Thomas Sydenham bottled opium, calling it laudanum. It grew popular across Europe. Europeans began to smoke opium after the introduction of tobacco from Native Americans. Soon, most people smoked it. In the eighteenth century, opium abuse became such a widespread problem in China that the government outlawed its use. Two trade wars fought between Britain and China became known as the Opium Wars. Almost all painkillers contained opium by the nineteenth century. Morphine was synthesized from opium in 1804; this drug is ten times more potent than opium. The newly invented hypodermic syringe was used to inject it. Its use on hundreds of thousands of wounded soldiers during the Civil War produced untold numbers of addicts. Heroin was derived in 1874. The dangers of addiction led many governments to pass laws to prohibit its use except by physicians.

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